CAREER: Integrating Seascapes and Energy Flow: learning and teaching about energy, biodiversity, and ecosystem function on the frontlines of climate change.

Information

  • NSF Award
  • 2418012
Owner
  • Award Id
    2418012
  • Award Effective Date
    10/1/2023 - 8 months ago
  • Award Expiration Date
    4/30/2026 - a year from now
  • Award Amount
    $ 65,538.00
  • Award Instrument
    Continuing Grant

CAREER: Integrating Seascapes and Energy Flow: learning and teaching about energy, biodiversity, and ecosystem function on the frontlines of climate change.

Coastal marshes provide a suite of vital functions that support natural and human communities. Humans frequently take for granted and exploit these ecosystem services without fully understanding the ecological feedbacks, linkages, and interdependencies of these processes to the wider ecosystem. As demands on coastal ecosystem services have risen, marshes have experienced substantial loss due to direct and indirect impacts from human activity. The rapidly changing coastal ecosystems of Louisiana provide a natural experiment for understanding how coastal change alters ecosystem function. This project is developing new metrics and tools to assess food web variability and test hypotheses on biodiversity and ecosystem function in coastal Louisiana. The research is determining how changing habitat configuration alters the distribution of energy across the seascape in a multitrophic system. This work is engaging students from the University of Louisiana Lafayette and Dillard University in placed-based learning by immersing them in the research and local restoration efforts to address land loss and preserve critical ecosystem services. Students are developing a deeper understanding of the complex issues facing coastal regions through formal course work, directed field work, and outreach. Students are interacting with stakeholders and managers who are currently battling coastal change. Their directed research projects are documenting changes in coastal habitat and coupling this knowledge with the consequences to ecosystems and the people who depend on them. By participating in the project students are emerging with knowledge and training that is making them into informed citizens and capable stewards of the future of our coastal ecosystems, while also preparing them for careers in STEM. The project is supporting two graduate students and a post-doc.<br/><br/>The transformation and movement of energy through a food web are key links between biodiversity and ecosystem function. A major hurdle to testing biodiversity ecosystem function theory is a limited ability to assess food web variability in space and time. This research is quantifying changing seascape structure, species diversity, and food web structure to better understand the relationship between biodiversity and energy flow through ecosystems. The project uses cutting edge tools and metrics to test hypotheses on how the distribution, abundance, and diversity of key species are altered by ecosystem change and how this affects function. The hypotheses driving the research are: 1) habitat is a more important indirect driver of trophic structure than a direct change to primary trophic pathways; and 2) horizontal and vertical diversity increases with habitat resource index. Stable isotope analysis is characterizing energy flow through the food web. Changes in horizontal and vertical diversity in a multitrophic system are being quantified using aerial surveys and field sampling. To assess the spatial and temporal change in food web resources, the project is combining results from stable isotope analysis and drone-based remote sensing technology to generate consumer specific energetic seascape maps (E-scapes) and trophic niche metrics. In combination these new metrics are providing insight into species’ responses to changing food web function across the seascape and through time.<br/><br/>This project is jointly funded by Biological Oceanography and the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR).<br/><br/>This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.

  • Program Officer
    Daniel J. Thornhilldthornhi@nsf.gov7032928143
  • Min Amd Letter Date
    2/9/2024 - 3 months ago
  • Max Amd Letter Date
    2/9/2024 - 3 months ago
  • ARRA Amount

Institutions

  • Name
    University of Georgia Research Foundation Inc
  • City
    ATHENS
  • State
    GA
  • Country
    United States
  • Address
    310 E CAMPUS RD RM 409
  • Postal Code
    306021589
  • Phone Number
    7065425939

Investigators

  • First Name
    James
  • Last Name
    Nelson
  • Email Address
    jimmy.nelson@uga.edu
  • Start Date
    2/9/2024 12:00:00 AM

Program Element

  • Text
    EDUCATION/HUMAN RESOURCES,OCE
  • Code
    169000

Program Reference

  • Text
    COVID-Disproportionate Impcts Inst-Indiv
  • Text
    CAREER-Faculty Erly Career Dev
  • Code
    1045
  • Text
    DIVERSITY: ROLE IN ECOSYSTEMS
  • Code
    1097
  • Text
    EXP PROG TO STIM COMP RES
  • Code
    9150